Precious nonsense : the Gettysburg address, Ben Jonson's epitaphs on his children, and Twelfth night

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Precious nonsense : the Gettysburg address, Ben Jonson's epitaphs on his children, and Twelfth night

Stephen Booth

University of California Press, 1998

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Includes bibliographical references and index

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内容説明

Why do we value literature so? Many would say for the experience it brings us. But what is it about that experience that makes us treasure certain writings above others? Stephen Booth suggests that the greatest appeal of our most valued works may be that they are, in one way or another, nonsensical. He uses three disparate texts - the Gettysburg Address, Ben Jonson's epitaphs on his children, and Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" - to demonstrate how poetics triumphs over logic in the mental activity that enriches our experience of reading. Booth demonstrates the lapses in logic and the irrational connections in examples of very different types of literature, showing how they come close to incoherence yet maintain for the reader a reliable order and purpose. Ultimately, Booth argues, literature gives us the capacity to cope effortlessly with, and even to transcend, the complicated and demanding mental experiences it generates for us. This book is in part a critique of the trends - old and new - of literary criticism. But it is also a testimony to the power of the process of reading itself.

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